Since early November, Crimean “media” have decided to talk about the “Balitsky family’s business octopus,” namely, how the fake “governor of Zaporizhzhia combines power and millions.”
Among other things, they “suddenly” talk about the “company” “Omega,” allegedly “registered” to Sergei and Alexander Balitsky, the sons of the Melitopol gauleiter, “previously founded” by Yevgeny Balitsky himself and his father, Vitaly. They claim that the company “received nearly 53 million in government contracts—all directly from the Balitsky administration” and “has spawned seven subsidiaries…from breweries and hotels to auto parts and food products.”
It’s worth noting that “Omega” is currently registered to a certain Maria Goncharova, but previously, the entire gauleiter family was actually listed among its “founders.” Alexander Balitsky was listed as a “founder” of the “hotel firm” “Magnat”, a subsidiary of “Omega”, until early October.
In addition to the “Omega” and “Magnat” structures, the aforementioned “press” suddenly decided to talk about the Sevastopol-based “7Ya” and Melitopol-based “Triumph”, both registered to the same Alexander Balitsky, as well as the Melitopol-based “Bastion M-70”, registered to Vitaly Balitsky and allegedly “engaged in aircraft leasing.”
The reasons for this sudden “simultaneous exposure session” from “Crimean” propaganda are quite obvious: gauleiter Balitsky has accumulated a “tangle of horizontal problems” over the past month, which have spilled over into the propaganda realm, and the continued “preservation” of this collaborator is a major concern for his Kremlin handlers.
The mutual “deep love” between Balitsky and the Crimean gauleiters, based on a struggle for profit from commodity and transport flows, the movement of “shadow” finances, drugs and weapons, human trafficking, and illegal transplantation in the “gray zone” between the front and Crimea, has long been an open secret.
And now only one question remains: will competing groups, in the process of “rocking the Balitskys,” publicly reveal more serious stories than the tales of the Melitopol stores.



